Wednesday, February 22, 2017

What Am I Doing?

 This week in class we took a look at rubrics. I received a few rubrics in high school but I honestly didn't use them much. In high school I found them as more of a nuisance. Looking back, I don't think I fully understood how to use them. Throughout my college career I have fallen in love with rubrics! If I don't have one I feel like I'm driving blind, especially on big assignments. Rubrics tell students exactly what the teacher/professor expects. It gives you a target to aim for and tells you exactly what you need to do to hit that target.

I don't know how frequently I will give my students rubrics in my math classroom. I could see creating one for a project, but I am also toying with the idea of giving students a rubric for the entire year. This rubric would tell students what I am expecting from them every day. It would include ideas like participation, completed homework, critical thinking, mathematical reasoning, respect towards teacher and peers, cooperation during group projects... They may or may not receive an official grade at the end of the year on some of these, but it would give students a sense of direction in my class as well as tell them what I expect of them as learners.

Rubrics allow the teacher to demonstrate leadership (NCPTS 1) as well as reflect on their practice (NCPTS 5). A teacher's expectations may sometimes be to high for the students. A rubric would allow the teacher to see how many students are reaching or exceeding her expectations and can make changes accordingly.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Love to Assess

On Valentines Day we discussed different types of assessments, which is a teachers favorite thing to do right? It may or may not be, however it is extremely important in the classroom.

There are 2 types of assessment that we, as teachers, are expected to utilize: formative and summative (or informal and formal in EdTPA terminology). The main goal of formative assessment is to allow the teacher to monitor student learning during the lesson, while providing feedback to the student. These assessments are not usually given a grade. Summative assessments tend to have higher stakes. They are given a specific grade and are used to measure the students' mastery of the learning standards. They are usually given at the end of a unit or chapter and at the end of the term/semester.

We also talked about "Assessent of-for-as Learning." Assessment of learning is a summative assessment where a grade is applied. It is given at the end of learning. Assessment for learning is a formative assessment which is on going during the lesson. Examples of these are tickets out the door, quizzes, homework.... Assessment as learning is where the student self assesses, or where peers provide feedback to one another. It is also on going during the lesson. Some examples of these are rubrics, peer feedback groups...

It is super important for a teacher to assess her (or his) students. A teacher always needs to know where their students are performing. If I had to pick one, I would say that formative assessment is more important. It allows the teacher to monitor student learning everyday. They are able to make sure that each student understands a concept before moving on. This helps every child to succeed. It also allows for a teacher to reflect on their practice (NCPTS 5) by helping them discover gaps in the students' learning. They are then able to adapt their teaching methods to better suit the class.

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Research Overload

This week has brought the normal load of homework along with 2 tests, 3 papers to write, 5 articles to read, and a whole lot of research in not just one, but several of my classes. Overloaded only begins to describe my stress levels. I can't tell you how many times I have thought "I'll just do it later" or "what's it matter if I do this?" Of course, after a little bit of procrastination, I completed the work that needed to be done. I know that the assignments I'm doing in my EDUC and MATH classes are only meant to benefit me as a future teacher, even if they seem rigorous and annoying at the moment. There will come a day when those 2 tests turn into 2x10 (or more) tests to grade, those papers turn into lesson plans to write, and all that research becomes a search for a new method to teach a concept that my students didn't get the first time around. 

Luckily we are getting a head start on some of that research. This week in our EDUC 316 class we began looking at our BPH (Best Practices Handbook) assignment. Specifically, we are unpacking standards from the Common Core Literacy Anchor Standards and applying research based instructional strategies to teach those standards. Each person in the class is assigned a couple of different standards. However, the exciting part is that by the end of the semester we will have a collaborative piece of work that unpacks the Anchor Standards, and provides us with strategies to teach those standards! This is a great resource that we can take with us throughout the rest of our college career and into our future classrooms. 

I can apply several of the NC Professional Teacher Standards here. The first standard addresses teachers as a leader, which includes working collaboratively with other teachers. We can also look at the third standard which states that teachers know the content they teach. This includes that teachers should align their instruction with the North Carolina Course of Study, along with making the information relevant to the students. Thirdly, we can see standards 4 here, which instructs teachers to facilitate learning for their students. To accomplish this, teachers must always be utilizing and researching a variety of instructional methods. 

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

You Know?

I have heard "unpack your standards" a hundred times in all of my EDUC classes. However, I was never given much explanation on what that means and how to do it myself. In math I am able to go to www.dpi.state.nc.us, click on K-12 curriculum - Mathematics - Standard Course of Study, then I click on the appropriate grade level and the standards are already unpacked for me. This is the resource I have always used for lesson planning, so I was a little confused when I heard that we were going to learn how to unpack the standards.

This week we dove into unpacking our first standard. We did this using a KUD chart - Know, Understand, Do.

Know: What are the facts? The vocab? What are all the little pieces that the students need to know?

Understand: What are the concepts? How do all those little pieces come together to make a whole?

Do: What are the skills needed for the student to demonstrate understanding? What is a tangible piece of evidence that shows mastery?

I know more than I did in regards to unpacking standards, but I will admit I am still confused. I am sure with more practice and class discussion the light bulb will flicker. As a teacher it's important that I become competent in this area. Standard 3a of the NCTCS says "Teachers align their instruction with the NC Standard Course of Study. I can't do that if I don't have the skills to take a standard apart and apply it to my lesson appropriately.